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New Queer Titles to Read Before the Homophobes Ban Them
By D’Anne Witkowski
In an era when books by or about LGBTQ+ people are being taken off library shelves and banned in grade schools, there’s never been a more important time to support queer literature. Remember: Representation not only matters, it saves lives. LGBTQ+ people will not be erased, as the pages of these books prove.
Fiction
“The Salt Grows Heavy”
Cassandra Khaw
A mermaid, a prince and a plague doctor all walk into a bar. Actually, it’s not a bar but a village of bloodthirsty children. Author Cassandra Khaw’s wildly original novel is a dark fairy tale that defies easy explanation. Part nightmare, part romance, Khaw crafts this story with poetic prose and an eye for the macabre.
The Adult” by Bronwyn Fischer
A college freshman. An older woman. An affair. Bronwyn Fischer’s “The Adult” is a beautifully written novel about what it means to find yourself as a young person and whether finding yourself is even really possible when you’re consumed by a relationship with someone older and, presumably, wiser than you.
“Confidence” by Rafael Frumkin
A novel about a couple of gay scalawags who con the rich? Yes, please. After meeting at a juvenile delinquent boot camp, Orson and Ezra become partners in a life of crime. When they embark on the biggest scam of their career, targeting unfulfilled rich people, things don’t exactly go as planned. Written in an engaging voice, “Confidence” is a book about how it pays to be morally bankrupt. Or does it?
Non-Fiction
“Hi Honey, I’m Homo” by Matt Baume
You can learn a lot about cultural attitudes toward LGBTQ+ people by watching TV. Decades of it, in fact. And if you’re thinking, “Well who has the time for that?” worry not. Matt Baume has you covered. “Hi Honey, I’m Homo” examines how the fight for LGBTQ+ equality has been reflected through TV history. From “All In the Family” to “Soap” to “The Golden Girls” to “Modern Family,” Baume illustrates how sitcoms shaped and continue to shape the way people see LGBTQ+ people and how LGBTQ+ people see themselves.
“We See Each Other: A Black, Trans Journey Through TV and Film” by Tre’vell Anderson
If you start every morning with the “What A Day” podcast, then you already know that Black trans journalist Tre’vell Anderson is engaging, hilarious and smart as hell. In “We See Each Other,” Anderson traces both a personal and on-screen history of transgender visibility through movies and TV shows like “Some Like It Hot,” “Boys Don’t Cry” and “RuPaul’s Drag Race.” This is an absolute must-read.
“We Set the Night on Fire: Igniting the Gay Revolution” by Martha Shelley
During this time of intense backlash against LGBTQ+
rights, it’s wise to turn to the activists who were on the forefront of this movement to remember our history and how far we’ve come. “We Set the Night on Fire” recounts lesbian founder of the Gay Liberation Front Martha Shelley’s story of fighting for equality. It’s a personal history that cannot be separated from the history of the larger Civil Rights Movement. May this book inspire more LGBTQ+ people and allies to take to the streets and fight for our lives.
Memoir
“Boy Wander” by Jobert E. Abueva
In University of Michigan alum Jobert Abueva’s memoir, he navigates multiple identities as he grows up. A star student at a Catholic boys’ school in Tokyo and, after school, a call boy for rich foreign men. A child born in Manila and coming of age in Kathmandu and Bangkok before moving to the U.S. in the peak Reagan 1980s. A young man craving his family’s love and acceptance but afraid to be fully honest. Abueva’s road to self-acceptance was not an easy one, and this memoir is not always an easy one to read, but Abueva’s honesty makes it ultimately rewarding.
“Pageboy” by Elliot Page
They say celebrities have no private lives, and to some extent, with paparazzi around every corner, that’s true. But one’s interior life is a whole different story, and for Elliot Page, that life was very different from the public life on display after “Juno” brought Page wide acclaim and stardom. “Pageboy” tells the story of Page refusing to be crushed by Hollywood’s demands and society’s expectations and deciding to live his truth.
Tweakerworld: A Memoir” by Jason Yamas
How does one accidentally become one of San Francisco’s biggest crystal meth dealers? You start with Beanie Babies. OK, not exactly. But like a lot of Yamas’s life — past, present and future — it’s complicated. “Tweakerworld” explores Yamas’s history of addiction, from Adderall to meth, his career as a filmmaker, gay culture, his relationships with his family and boyfriends and his often drug-fueled sex life. “Tweakerworld” is brutally honest and beautifully told.
D’Anne Witkowski is a writer living in Michigan with her wife and son. She has been writing about LGBTQ+ politics for nearly two decades. Follow her on Twitter @MamaDWitkowski.